Can Zidane be Real's Guardiola?

Not many were surprised when news filtered in early Monday morning that Florentino Perez had shown Rafael Benitez the exit door after just seven months in charge, neither did the choice of Zinedine Zidane, as the new Real Madrid manager came as a surprise too, as the Frenchman, was heavily touted to take charge of the club sooner or later having been cutting his teeth at the Castilla (Real Madrid’s B team). The question on the lips of most observers now is whether Zidane can be Real’s Guadiola?

Zinedine Zidane has finally been given the top job - now it’s time to show he can have the same effect on Real Madrid that Pep Guardiola had on Barcelona. When Barca gambled on the then 38-year-old back in 2008 it paid off with 14 trophies in four years. Zidane is 43-years-old and has started, much like Guardiola, as coach of Real Madrid’s youth team. Now he has to make the same step up.
Could Zinedine Zidane be Real Madrid's very own Pep Guardiola after the legendary Frenchman replaced Rafael Benitez on Monday?
Real Madrid have brought an end to the farcical reign of Rafael Benitez and Florentino Perez is hoping that a model which has worked so well for fierce rivals Barcelona will rekindle their success after appointing club icon Zinedine Zidane to replace him as head coach.
Benitez lasted just 18 La Liga matches at the Santiago Bernabeu, sacked amid rumours of dressing room discontent and dissatisfaction amongst supporters which brought an end to his spell in charge, despite losing only three times in the top flight.
His time at the helm appeared doomed from the start, with immediate doubts raised over his tactical style and widespread disappointment at the sacking of Carlo Ancelotti, with President Perez forced to issue him with a vote of confidence in November after losing 4-0 at home to Barca in El Clasico.
After deciding to axe Benitez, Madrid have turned to Zidane, their former playmaker who helped them to Champions League glory in 2002, the highlight of a five-year spell with the club during the Galacticos era.
Speaking after his appointment on Monday, Zidane said: "It is the best club in the world with the best fan-base. I will do my very best so that at the end of the season this club will have a trophy.
"I will work hard with all the players and I think it will go well. It is an important day for me and an emotional day - even more than when I signed as a player."
Madrid have been grooming Zidane for the position for two-and-a-half years and Perez had never hidden the fact he saw the legendary Frenchman as their future boss.
First, the World Cup-winner served as assistant to the popular Ancelotti in 2013-14 as Madrid won La Decima. Zidane then took a head coaching job for the first time and led Real Madrid Castilla for 18 months up until his appointment.
The 43-year-old's first season was far from smooth, with a row over whether he had sufficient coaching badges coupled with Madrid's second string coming sixth in Segunda B Group 2 – one of four divisions that form Spain's third tier, a finish that saw them fail to reach the promotion play-offs.
This season, Zidane leaves his team in better shape. Castilla are second with 37 points having suffered just two defeats from 19 games.
There is a huge question mark, though, over whether a year and a half in a lower league is suitable preparation for arguably the biggest managerial job in football, even for a man who reached the very highest level in his playing career.
But it is a method that has worked before. Over at Camp Nou, playing icon Guardiola had only coached Barcelona B for a single campaign before getting the top job and what followed was a stunning era of success – three leagues, two Champions Leagues, two Copa del Reys and a total of 14 trophies in four years.



Check This Day newspaper for the full story.



































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